H.R. 1429 would create an exception for victims of domestic violence from current
federal law and policy mandating zero tolerance for criminal activity in federally assisted housing.
Under HUD's "One Strike Policy," tenants may be held strictly liable and evicted by public housing
authorities for criminal behavior by "a tenant, any member of a tenant's household, a guest or
another person under the tenant's control." Reportedly, the policy has been applied to evict public
housing tenants who were victims of domestic violence at the hands of their own household
members or guests. The bill rewrites federal no-fault eviction rules to avoid such application to
domestic violence victims. In effect, it would erect an "innocent tenant defense" for victims of
domestic or dating violence, where the target of the criminal act is either the tenant herself or an
immediate family member. Persons guilty of physical acts of violence against family members or
others -- whether committed on the premises or elsewhere -- would not enjoy immunity, but could
be evicted by public housing authorities under current HUD rules. In addition, by placing
"paramount importance" on the safety and "continued maintenance" of domestic violence victims,
the bill could be interpreted to create a heightened duty of care on the part of public housing
authorities towards the tenant in such circumstances.

Order Code RS21623
September 25, 2003
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Legal Analysis of H.R. 1429, the “One Strike
and You’re Out! Act of 2003”
namer ed acted
Legislative Attorney
American Law Division
Summary
H.R. 1429 would create an exception for victims of domestic violence from current
federal law and policy mandating zero tolerance for criminal activity in federally
assisted housing. Under HUD’s “One Strike Policy,” tenants may be held strictly liable
and evicted by public housing authorities for criminal behavior by “a tenant, any
member of a tenant’s household, a guest or another person under the tenant’s control.”
Reportedly, the policy has been applied to evict public housing tenants who were
victims of domestic violence at the hands of their own household members or guests.
The bill rewrites federal no-fault eviction rules to avoid such application to domestic
violence victims. In effect, it would erect an “innocent tenant defense” for victims of
domestic or dating violence, where the target of the criminal act is either the tenant
herself or an immediate family member. Persons guilty of physical acts of violence
against family members or others – whether committed on the premises or elsewhere
– would not enjoy immunity, but could be evicted by public housing authorities under
current HUD rules. In addition, by placing “paramount importance” on the safety and
“continued maintenance” of domestic violence victims, the bill could be interpreted to
create a heightened duty of care on the part of public housing authorities towards the
tenant in such circumstances.
In 1988, Congress amended the United States Housing Act of 1937 by enacting the
Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which required public housing authorities (PHAs) to include
clauses in all their leases allowing eviction of tenants for criminal or drug-related
activities. Motivating the amendment were congressional concerns that “rampant drugrelated or violent crime” was imposing a “reign of terror” on public housing tenants; that
these conditions led to even more serious criminal activity and a deterioration of the
public housing environment; and that the federal government had a duty to provide public
housing that is “decent, safe, and free from illegal drugs.”1 Two years later, Congress
revisited the problem of criminal and drug-related activity in public housing when it
1
42 U.S.C. § 11901.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
CRS-2
enacted the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act of 1990. It expanded
the bases for eviction to include “any criminal activity that threatens the health, safety, or
right to peaceful enjoyment.”2 The Cranston-Gonzales Act required more stringent
language to appear in all public housing leases, providing that:
[A]ny criminal activity that threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment
of the premises by other tenants or any drug-related criminal activity on or near such
premises, engaged in by a public housing tenant, any member of the tenant’s
household, or any guest or other person under the tenant’s control, shall be cause for
termination of tenancy.3
Congress further bolstered the Cranston-Gonzalez Act by enacting the Housing
Opportunity Program Extension Act of 1996.4 This amendment gave PHAs nationwide
access to criminal background information screening for public housing applicants,5
called for admissions procedures to screen out drug users and alcohol abusers likely to
harm others,6 and further broadened the scope of the lease provision by allowing the
termination of tenancy for criminal activity “on or off” the premises instead of “on or
near” the premises.7 Thereafter, the President signed the Quality Housing and Work
Responsibility Act of 1998. In part, the new law clarified that the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) could issue due process determination for
eviction proceedings based on “violent” as well as “drug-related” criminal activity, and
that such activity could occur “on or off such [public housing] premises.”8
HUD has interpreted the statute to authorize a “One Strike Policy,” permitting
eviction by PHAs whether or not the tenant knew, should have known, or tried to prevent
the criminal activity.9 Thus, tenants may be held strictly liable for criminal behavior by
“a tenant, any member of a tenant’s household, a guest or another person under the
2
42 U.S.C. § 1437d (l)(6).
3
P.L. 101-625, § 504, 104 Stat. 4181 (1990)(codified at 42 U.S.C. 1437d (l)(6)).
4
P.L. 104-120, § 9(a)(1), 110 Stat. 834 (1996).
5
42 U.S.C. § 1437d(q).
6
Id. at § 1437n(e).
7
Id. at § 1437(d)(1)(6).
8
Id. at § 1437d(k).
9
See HUD v. Rucker, 535 U.S. 125 (2002). The statute was also relied upon by President
Clinton when, in his 1996 State of the Union Address, he announced a “one strike and you’re
out policy” to govern evictions from public housing for alleged criminal activities. Several
months later, President Clinton elaborated: “If you break the law, you no longer have a home in
public housing, one strike and you’re out. That should be the law everywhere in America.” The
President directed the HUD Secretary to “issue guidelines to public housing and law
enforcement officials to spell out with unmistakable clarity how to enforce [the policy].”
Remarks announcing the “One Strike and You’re Out” Initiative in Public Housing,” in 32
Weekly Comp. Pres. Doc. 582, 584 (April 1, 1996). HUD initially published the guidelines for
the one-strike initiative in April of 1996. PIH 96-16. Though the initiative was presented as new
policy, it relied on existing legislation and regulations. As President Clinton noted, “Believe it
or not, the Federal law has actually authorized ‘one strike’ eviction since 1988.”
CRS-3
tenant’s control.”10 For evictions based on the acts of tenants’ household members and
guests, allowing access to the premises establishes the tenant’s responsibility, and the
state of tenant’s knowledge, if any, is not an issue. But for “other persons” degree of
contact with the tenant or family members determines whether sufficient “legal control”
exists to hold the tenant responsible for that person’s criminal conduct. For example, the
tenant’s legal control over “commercial visitors” – solicitors, delivery persons, etc – or
other nonguest invitees on the premises only sporadically or for brief periods “necessarily
would be limited by the brevity of the visit and would not extend to activity off public
housing premises.”11 In addition to terminating a tenancy, the HUD regulations allow
PHAs discretion to continue tenancies, provided that any culpable household member is
excluded,12 and to consider rehabilitation when deciding whether or not to terminate a
tenancy.13
Application of the federal zero tolerance statute and regulations, and corollary
provisions in the laws of several states, have been the subject of various legal
challenges.14 In the leading case, HUD v. Rucker, the U.S. Supreme Court held that §
1437d(l)(6) of the federal law was unambiguous and permitted eviction of tenants for the
actions of third parties regardless of their knowledge of drug or criminal activity. It
further affirmed that “control” meant only “that the tenant ha[d] permitted access to the
premises,” and that the statute “entrusted” the local PHAs to make the decision whether
to evict the tenant for a violation. A controversy that has emerged in Rucker’s wake
concerns reports of public housing tenants who have been evicted after complaining of
domestic violence perpetrated upon them by their own household members or guests.15
H.R. 1429 appears intended to rewrite federal no-fault eviction rules to avoid such
application to domestic violence victims. Thus, the bill would amend the public housing
and § 8 rental assistance programs by addition of the following proviso:
except that such criminal activity, engaged in by a member of a tenant’s household or
any guest or other person under the tenant’s control, shall not be cause for termination
of tenancy of the tenant if the tenant or immediate member of the tenant’s family is
a victim of domestic violence or dating violence and, as a result, could not control or
prevent the criminal activity relating to domestic violence or dating violence; and
except that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to limit the authority of a
public housing agency to evict individuals who engage in criminal acts of physical
violence against family members or others, and in all cases, a public housing agency
shall consider the safety, security and continued maintenance of victims of domestic
violence to be of paramount importance.
10
24 C.F.R. § 966.4(l)(5)(i)(B) (2003).
11
66 Fed. Reg. 28,782 (2001).
12
Id. at § 966.4(l)(5)(vii)(C).
13
Id. at § 966.4(l)(5)(vii)(D).
14
See RS21199, “No-fault Eviction of Public Housing Tenants for Illegal Drug Use: A Legal
Analysis of Department of Housing and Urban Development v. Rucker.” (CRS 4-15-2002).
15
See Lapidus, L.M, “ Doubly Victimized: Housing Discrimination Against Victims of Domestic
Violence,” 11 Am. U.J. Gender Soc. Pol’y & L 377 (2003).
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In effect, the bill would erect an “innocent tenant defense” – rejected by the Rucker Court
- for victims of domestic or dating violence, where the target of the criminal act is either
the tenant herself or an immediate family member. Persons guilty of physical acts of
violence against family members or others – whether committed on the premises or
elsewhere – would not enjoy immunity, but could be evicted by public housing authorities
under current HUD rules. In addition, by placing “paramount importance” on the safety
and “continued maintenance” of domestic violence victims, the bill could be interpreted
to create a heightened duty of care on the part of PHAs towards the tenant in such
circumstances. The bill is largely silent on what specific measures, if any, might be
required. The annual reporting requirement imposed by § 4 of the bill relative to the
numbers of evictions for domestic or dating violence may provide one example.
However, in the absence of further legislative guidance, the precise contours of any such
duty, or any obligations it may imply, would remain a matter for judicial determination.
Finally, note that other possible remedies for domestic violence victims may exist
under current federal law. The Court did not address the potential for gender
discrimination in PHA eviction policies in Rucker. But the Fair Housing Act16 may
provide an avenue for challenging the eviction of domestic violence victims for the
violent act of their abusers. Because women are disproportionately the victims of
domestic violence, it could be argued, application of the current One Strike policy has a
disparate impact on women. Disparate impact claims arise where a group protected by
the Fair Housing Act is adversely affected disproportionately by a facially neutral policy.
In the past, the theory has been invoked by racial minorities or the disabled when denied
housing access as a consequence of policies not overtly discriminatory on their face.17 In
a case settled by consent decree in November of 2001, claims of gender discrimination
under the Fair Housing Act were predicated on the eviction of a low-income housing
tenant as the result of a domestic violence incident.18
16
42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq.
17
See Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corporation ,429 U.S.
252 (1977).
18
U.S. v. C.B.M. Group, Inc., Consent Decree 01-857 PA (D. Or. 11-05-2001), at
[http://archive.aclu.org/court/alveraconsentdecree.pdf]. HUD brought an action in federal district
court on behalf of Ms Alvera, who intervened as of right pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 3612(o)(2).
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